@luminum / @Steven Acres
Respects to you two. I have a different faith and express it on the fonts removing the k/K shape at design and coder (html/javascript) fonts. Posting a few website addresses on this forum's threads I suppose has caused some impolite emotion. It's also because it's new to you. I thought I would share it with the forum. Using an involvement website does not mean I have to surrender to another stranger trying to act as if they are the government. I respect your talents and expertise. I am a netizen and I am not a scholar. Also I am not trying to sell fonts or software at a monetary profit from my participation here. Thus as I am from a different 'school' especially including racial and religious origin there could be some bias and weasel name calling. I won't report you to the Police because you are innocent I feel at this time due to your conditioning. Though I had to report today someone elsewhere on the net because they calculatedly insulted me and my faith.

You don't feel you are conditioned (Told From Above, bullied as a youth by someone with a K name, read in a hat, dreamt last night, don't like Special K, got evicted from a K-Mart, or otherwise) to dis-like the letter K?

Apparently, it's still unclear to the regular readers of this forum why you don't like K.

I managed to wade through most of the content on the Kalphabet website. So far as I can gather, the argument is that the shape of the letter K is psychically disturbing on account of its relationship to a particular pattern of three rivers in India and their association with ritual suicide, and that this shape plants suicidal ideas in the mind. Leaving side the fact that if one were unaware of the association between this shape and the confluence of the Indian rivers and, in turn, their association with suicide, one would have no basis for forming such ideas -- and leaving aside the fact that this ritual suicide is framed in positive terms by texts cited on the Kalphabet website --, it seems to me that the claim that the K shape prompts suicidal thoughts is empirically testable.

I should like to state for the record that I have been exposed to all letters of the Latin alphabet since an early age, and none of them have made me even mildly depressed, let alone suicidal. Anybody want to suppress the capital gamma because it looks like a gibbet?

It implies this is not a typographical problem but a mere psychological one, and therefore discussing it has no place on a typophile's hangout. There may be online support groups where you can find a sympathetic ear (WikiAnswers, on 'What phobia is the fear of letters?', categorizes this question under "Mental Health, Medical Terminology").

Perhaps it would be different if the as yet anonymous o.p. could point out specific typefaces that trigger his suicidal tendencies. ITC Kabel and Futura, for instance, have pointy K's. Arnold Boecklin, on the other hand, is much more easier on the eye, no sharp edge anywhere. It's kind of overgeneralizing to state "I don't like any of them."

If कen कercheval कicकs कittens, while कnacकered कooकs from कentucकy कeep कnocकing out कnavish कurdish कulaकs in कnotted कerchiefs with कeen कuकris and कrises, then a कinकy कid in कhaकi कnicकerbocकers has कissed कing कong कindly in the कirकyard.

From the Neil Simon play The Sunshine Boys, the character Willy explains it to his nephew: “Fifty-seven years in this business, you learn a few things. You know what words are funny and which words are not funny. Alka Seltzer is funny. You say "Alka Seltzer," you get a laugh... Words with "k" in them are funny. Casey Stengel, that's a funny name. Robert Taylor is not funny.”